teleo-codex/foundations/collective-intelligence/collective intelligence is a measurable property of group interaction structure not aggregated individual ability.md
m3taversal 79396f54dc leo: remove 21 entertainment/cultural-dynamics duplicates + fix domain:livingip in 204 files
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  in 204 files across all core/, foundations/, and domains/ directories. Update domain
  enum in schemas/claim.md and CLAUDE.md.
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Pentagon-Agent: Leo <76FB9BCA-CC16-4479-B3E5-25A3769B3D7E>

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-06 16:11:17 +00:00

3.6 KiB

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Woolley et al discovered a collective intelligence factor (c) that predicts group performance across diverse tasks and correlates with equal turn-taking and social sensitivity rather than average or maximum individual IQ -- Pentland confirmed that communication patterns predict performance independent of content claim collective-intelligence Woolley et al, Evidence for a Collective Intelligence Factor (Science, 2010); Pentland, Social Physics (2014) proven collective intelligence, computational social science 2026-02-28

collective intelligence is a measurable property of group interaction structure not aggregated individual ability

Woolley, Chabris, Pentland, Hashmi, and Malone (2010) discovered that groups possess a measurable "collective intelligence" factor (c) that predicts performance across diverse tasks -- analogous to the g factor for individual intelligence. Crucially, c was only weakly correlated with average IQ (r = 0.15) or maximum IQ (r = 0.19) of group members.

What did predict c: (1) equality of conversational turn-taking (lower variance in speaking turns = higher c), (2) average social sensitivity measured by the Reading the Mind in the Eyes test, and (3) proportion of women in the group (attributed to higher average social sensitivity scores).

Pentland (2014) extended this using sociometer badges that tracked interaction patterns without content. Communication pattern alone -- measured by four "honest signals" (influence, mimicry, activity level, consistency) -- predicted team creativity and productivity. People who forge connections across teams increase organizational innovation. The flow of ideas through social networks correlates with collective intelligence independent of what those ideas contain.

Together, these findings establish that collective intelligence is an emergent structural property, not an aggregate of individual properties. Since intelligence is a property of networks not individuals, this provides the empirical mechanism: it's the interaction topology, not the individual capability at each node, that determines collective performance.

For collective intelligence architecture, the implications are specific: the system must enforce something like equal turn-taking -- preventing any single agent or contributor from dominating the knowledge graph. Since partial connectivity produces better collective intelligence than full connectivity on complex problems because it preserves diversity, both the amount and the pattern of information flow matter. And since ownership alignment turns network effects from extractive to generative, the incentive structure should reward balanced participation, not just volume of contribution.


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